| Literature DB >> 22970159 |
Sanjay Basu1, David Stuckler, Sukumar Vellakkal, Shah Ebrahim.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Reducing salt intake has been proposed to prevent cardiovascular disease in India. We sought to determine whether salt reductions would be beneficial or feasible, given the worry that unrealistically large reductions would be required, worsening iodine deficiency and benefiting only urban subpopulations. METHODS ANDEntities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22970159 PMCID: PMC3435319 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0044037
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Model diagram.
Health states are further divided into age-, gender- and location-specific (urban and rural) submodels. Deaths from non-cardiovascular events are calculated from each compartment of the model at each time point in the simulation (not drawn). The transition probabilities between health states in the model are detailed in Tables S1, S2 and S3. Dietary salt reduction in the model lowers the risk of incident and recurrent myocardial infarction and stroke events. MI: myocardial infarction.
Model parameters and data sources.
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| Population size among cohorts - | Indian Census |
| Risk of MI or stroke (incident and recurrent) among cohorts - | World Health Organization |
| Fatality rate from MI and stroke among cohorts - | World Health Organization |
| Non-MI/non-stroke mortality rates among cohorts - | World Health Organization |
| Hypertension prevalence among cohorts - | World Health Organization |
| Iodine levels in salt among provinces – | Indian National Family Health Survey [51] |
| Systolic blood pressure reduction for each gram salt reduction – | Meta-analysis |
| Relative risk reduction in MI/stroke from each mmHg reduction in systolic blood pressure – | Meta-analysis |
Sensitivity analyses.
| Outcome | Urban men | Urban women | Rural men | Rural women | Overall population |
| Reduction in annual rate per 10,000 persons (95% CI) | |||||
| Main simulation | |||||
| Incident MI | 35.4+/−5.8 | 13.9+/−2.3 | 5.0+/−0.8 | 8.4+/−1.4 | 14.7+/−2.4 |
| Incident Stroke | 2.0+/−0.3 | 2.0+/−0.3 | 2.1+/−0.4 | 2.2+/−0.4 | 2.1+/−0.4 |
| Deaths from either cause | 8.5+/−1.9 | 1.9+/−0.4 | 2.3+/−0.5 | 1.5+/−0.3 | 3.4+/−0.8 |
| Lower risk reduction with blood-pressure lowering | |||||
| Incident MI | 29.6+/−7.8 | 11.9+/−3.0 | 4.4+/−1.1 | 7.2+/−1.8 | 12.4+/−3.2 |
| Incident Stroke | 1.7+/−0.5 | 1.8+/−0.5 | 1.8+/0.5 | 1.9+/−0.5 | 1.8+/−0.5 |
| Deaths from either cause | 7.2+/−2.6 | 1.6+/−0.5 | 2.1+/−0.7 | 1.3+/−0.4 | 2.9+/−1.0 |
| Higher risk reduction with each gram salt reduced | |||||
| Incident MI | 147.1+/−24.8 | 61.0+/−10.3 | 21.5+/−3.6 | 35.7+/−6.0 | 62.0+/−10.4 |
| Incident Stroke | 9.3+/−1.6 | 8.8+/−1.6 | 9.9+/−1.7 | 9.7+/−1.7 | 9.5+/−1.7 |
| Deaths from either cause | 37.9+/−8.7 | 8.9+/−2.0 | 10.4+/−2.3 | 6.5+/−1.4 | 15.1+/−3.4 |
Projected Estimates of Reductions in Cardiovascular Disease from a Dietary Salt Reduction Target of 3 g/day achieved over 30 years (via a linear reduction in intake of 0.1 g/year), in the Main Simulation and According to Various Assumptions about Differential Salt Sensitivity and Blood Pressure Reduction Benefits in the Sensitivity Analyses. MI and stroke incidence includes both new cases and recurrent events.
Cardiovascular benefit of lowering blood pressure was equivalent to two-thirds of the benefit for a person whose native blood pressure was at that lower blood pressure level [42].
While the baseline simulation implements the results of a meta-analysis that does not reveal greater salt sensitivity among the elderly [27], we also simulated the case in which each gram reduction in salt intake leads to a greater reduction in blood pressure among older cohorts, as per some clinical trials [31], [32], in which the change in systolic pressure = −0.0598 * (mmol salt reduction)−0.0431 * (age-48)) (see Text S1) [26].
Figure 2Impact of salt reduction on cardiovascular events and deaths.
Projected Reductions in Cardiovascular Events Given a Dietary Salt Reduction Target of 3 g/day over 30 years (via a linear reduction in intake of 0.1 g/year) among Urban Men, Urban Women, Rural Men, and Rural Women, According to Age Cohort. Confidence intervals reflect 2 standard deviations around the mean result from 10,000 simulations. The estimated number of averted cases per year in each cohort (incorporating the population size and rate of events in each cohort) are provided in Table S7. Panel A: Change in new and recurrent MIs. Panel B: Change in new and recurrent strokes. Panel C: Change in deaths from MIs and strokes.